4.4 Interrelated problems
So far we have looked at problems in a singular manner; that is, we have considered each problem and decision as an isolated or 'stand alone' event. In reality this almost never happens. Problems arise in clusters and are frequently interlinked. We look at them differently, tending to concentrate on them in serial fashion. We may thus wind up treating a symptom rather than the problem.
Once treated, the symptom may go away, but if we haven't treated the root cause it may recur. An analogy of this might be trying to treat malaria with aspirin. Malaria has a whole host of symptoms, many of which can be masked with aspirin, but aspirin won't cure malaria. This presents a very good reason to emphasise 'diagnosing the cause'. By establishing the cause we can treat the problems and not the symptoms. This may also clear up a number of related problems without further intervention.
Reading 4.4
Read pages 207-208 of the Whetten and Cameron reading (Reading 4.2).
A very useful little guide!